originally posted by SFJoe:
Of all the historically documented practices that might tempt an unscrupulous Burgundy producer, chaptalization must be about 15th on the list.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
So why cite its owner's analysis?
The taxation picture he paints seems relevant to a general picture of financial pressure, one that might make some, less scrupulous producers, not just in Burgundy, but any place where categorical rankings are economically crucial, resort to chaptalization and other practices to more or less manufacture these differences.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Tim, as I understand it, it's not about valuing inventories at cost but about the value becoming immediatelly taxable as income even though it has not been realized: "les stocks sont estimés l’année de récolte au prix de revient et cette valeur devient immédiatement une recette, comme si le vin était vendu! Le viticulteur paie de l’impôt sur de l’argent qui n’est pas encaissé!"
originally posted by Brézème:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Tim, as I understand it, it's not about valuing inventories at cost but about the value becoming immediatelly taxable as income even though it has not been realized: "les stocks sont estimés l’année de récolte au prix de revient et cette valeur devient immédiatement une recette, comme si le vin était vendu! Le viticulteur paie de l’impôt sur de l’argent qui n’est pas encaissé!"
This gentleman makes a untrue statement, that most of the FNSEA boys (the local farmer douchebags) are using :
It is not the whole new stocks that are considered as an income but the stocks variation...
So if the stocks value increases from one year to an other, then the grower will indeed pay taxes on the increase though the wine is not sold.
originally posted by Brézème:
This gentleman makes a untrue statement, that most of the FNSEA boys (the local farmer douchebags) are using :
It is not the whole new stocks that are considered as an income but the stocks variation...
So if the stocks value increases from one year to an other, then the grower will indeed pay taxes on the increase though the wine is not sold.
originally posted by VLM:
I just want to point out the idiomatically perfect usage of douchebag from a non-native speaker.
originally posted by Tim York:
originally posted by Brézème:
This gentleman makes a untrue statement, that most of the FNSEA boys (the local farmer douchebags) are using :
It is not the whole new stocks that are considered as an income but the stocks variation...
So if the stocks value increases from one year to an other, then the grower will indeed pay taxes on the increase though the wine is not sold.
I thought that must be the case; the gentleman clearly does not understand accounts. Stock variations valued at cost in the P&L account is ultra-classic accounting. 99.9% of businesses worldwide are taxed on the basis of profits being sales for the year minus costs for the year plus/minus the stock variation at cost. If the stocks increase there is a net credit meaning that additional tax is payable but if stocks reduce there is a net charge leading to tax relief.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the richer sections of Burgundy, the economic pressures you claim would not exist or (in the extreme case) would be so greatly reduced as not to make the situation comparable.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
In effect, there is an economic disincentive to hold back (like, say, Lopez de Heredia) and sell when the wine is fully ready. If producers have to pay tax upfront on inventory increases, even at cost, there is pressure to sell sooner, so wine reaches the market sooner, and may end up getting drunk too early.
originally posted by Brézème:
Again Mr Bernard Hudelot, known for being on the Sarko-Le Pen side of the political picture, is complaining for the tough life rich people are having in France because of the marxist culture of french administration.
originally posted by Brézème:
Even though there is no profit and therefore no taxes to pay when building stocks valued at production cost, the need in cash is huge!!!
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I thought you and Tim agreed that tax is paid when inventories go up. If producers hold back and their inventories rise, they have to pay tax now, even though there is no profit until the bottles are sold years later.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Isn't the value of the variation always equal to the cost of production? I understood from Tim above that inventories are always valued at cost. If you were to value them at anything more than cost, e.g., current list price, the tax would be disastrously greater, no?
originally posted by Brézème:
Now the bankers? These motherfuckers are responsible for 90% of the problem on the growers side!
Even though there is no profit and therefore no taxes to pay when building stocks valued at production cost, the need in cash is huge!!!
And, unless one is already a millionaire, where to find this cash except in banks?
And even after being in this business for 15 years and without loosing money for the past 6-7 years, there NO french bank that agrees to finance my stocks only with the guaranty of their value...
This is all about politics. ALready wealthy growers will see all their problems coming from the government. Struggling newcomers without capital like me will always blame the financial system.
M.Mélenchon